Portafogli e Strategie (investimento) Dall'High Yield al Flight to Quality ... (Vol. IV): Cash is King (2 lettori)

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Imark

Forumer storico
Torniamo al nostro tema: se da un lato la salita del default rate continua verso i picchi attesi, dall'altro l'interrogativo corretto che sembrerebbe porsi è quello se sia tornato il momento per gli acquisti.

Se le agenzie di rating ci avessero visto giusto, e il picco dei default rate fosse effettivamente toccato entro fine anno, occorrerebbe comprare ora, cercando ovviamente di scansare quelli fra i bond HY destinati a defaultare... :D e dunque o muovendosi "cum grano salis" fra le diverse vicende dei titoli HY, oppure acquistando un fondo obbligazionario specializzato, magari dopo aver verificato che non ci sia dentro un quantitativo eccessivo di porcherie.

Intanto - giusto o sbagliato che sia il timing - gli americani stanno cominciando a scommetterci, come dimostrano i dati più recenti riguardanti l'inflow di capitale nei fondi specializzati in bond HY.

Nelle ultime 7 settimane, l'inflow nei fondi di settore si è rivelato pari a 3,71 mld $.

  • APRIL 30, 2009, 3:03 P.M. ET
US Junk-Bond Funds Report $327.6 Mln Inflow In Week - AMG


NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Investors continued to pour money into high-yield bond funds, which tallied $327.6 million of net inflows in the week ended Wednesday, according to AMG Data Services of Arcata, Calif.

It was the seventh straight week in which high-yield funds have seen strong inflows. During that run, the asset class has recorded total inflows of $3.71 billion. One week ago, the funds reported a $532.1 million inflow, excluding exchange-traded funds.

The number of funds reporting inflows slipped to 233 from 235 a week ago, with the number of funds reporting outflows jumping to 95 from 77.
The junk-bond market was firmly in positive territory again, gaining 2.97% in the week ended Wednesday, according to the Merrill Lynch High-Yield Master II Index.

The high-yield bond market has now gained 15.189% in 2009 to date.
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Devo ammetterlo anche se mi costa qualcosa: stavolta sono d'accordo con Deutsche Bank... non mi ricordo quando è successo l'ultima volta, ma - se è successo - deve trattarsi di molto tempo fa...

High-Yield Credit Rally May Be Close to End, Deutsche Bank Says

By John Glover


April 28 (Bloomberg) -- The rally in high-yield bonds that has pushed spreads down almost 22 percent since the beginning of March may be coming to an end, according to Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank AG.

Yield premiums that investors demand to hold the securities rather than government notes now imply a default rate that’s lower than forecast by Moody’s Investors Service, Reid, the bank’s head of fundamental credit strategy, wrote in a note.

“Prior to the rally, high-yield credit spreads had generally been some way ahead of forecasted default rates,” Reid wrote. “Unless expectations of the default rate start to decline markedly, the rally in high-yield may be close to running its course.”

Spreads on high-yield notes narrowed amid investor optimism that the efforts of the Federal Reserve and other authorities to contain the recession are beginning to take effect. The U.S. government and the Fed alone have spent, lent or committed more than $12.8 trillion, an amount that approaches the value of everything produced in the country last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Average spreads on U.S. high-yield bonds are 1,491 basis points, down from as wide as 1,886 on March 9, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.’s U.S. High Yield Master II Index.

Investors have re-entered the high-yield market as spreads have narrowed. Net inflows into corporate bonds in U.K. pounds in March rose 29 percent from the previous month to 1.46 billion pounds ($2.12 billion), while investors poured 93 million pounds into high-yield debt, an 86 percent increase from February, according to the Investment Management Association in London.

The global default rate rose to 7 percent at the end of March from 4.1 in December, with the number of defaulters the greatest for a single month since the Great Depression, according to Moody’s. The New York-based ratings firm expects the global default rate to peak at 14.6 percent in the final quarter of this year, it said earlier this month.

In the U.S., the default rate at the end of the first quarter was 7.4 percent, up from 4.5 percent at the end of 2008, according to Moody’s.
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Why capital structures matter... da leggere a tempo perso, perché la storia si ripete... e ci sarebbe da tenere un occhio fisso al mercato della commercial paper... finché sulle emissioni USA sarà necessaria la garanzia statale ... ;)

APRIL 21, 2009 Why Capital Structure Matters

Companies that repurchased stock two years ago are in a world of hurt


By MICHAEL MILKEN

Thirty-five years ago business publications were writing that major money-center banks would fail, and quoted investors who said, "I'll never own a stock again!" Meanwhile, some state and local governments as well as utilities seemed on the brink of collapse. Corporate debt often sold for pennies on the dollar while profitable, growing companies were starved for capital.



If that all sounds familiar today, it's worth remembering that 1974 was also a turning point. With financial institutions weakened by the recession, public and private markets began displacing banks as the source of most corporate financing. Bonds rallied strongly in 1975-76, providing underpinning for the stock market, which rose 75%.

Some high-yield funds achieved unleveraged, two-year rates of return approaching 100%. The accessibility of capital markets has grown continuously since 1974. Businesses are not as dependent on banks, which now own less than a third of the loans they originate. In the first quarter of 2009, many corporations took advantage of low absolute levels of interest rates to raise $840 billion in the global bond market.

That's 100% more than in the first quarter of 2008, and is a typical increase at this stage of a market cycle. Just as in the 1974 recession, investment-grade companies have started to reliquify. Once that happens, the market begins to open for lower-rated bonds. Thus BB- and B-rated corporations are now raising capital through new issues of equity, debt and convertibles.

This cyclical process today appears to be where it was in early 1975, when balance sheets began to improve and corporations with strong capital structures started acquiring others. In a single recent week, Roche raised more than $40 billion in the public markets to help finance its merger with Genentech.

Other companies such as Altria, HCA, Staples and Dole Foods, have used bond proceeds to pay off short-term bank debt, strengthening their balance sheets and helping restore bank liquidity. These new corporate bond issues have provided investors with positive returns this year even as other asset groups declined.

The late Nobel laureate Merton Miller and I, although good friends, long debated whether this kind of capital-structure management is an essential job of corporate leaders. Miller believed that capital structure was not important in valuing a company's securities or the risk of investing in them.

My belief -- first stated 40 years ago in a graduate thesis and later confirmed by experience -- is that capital structure significantly affects both value and risk. The optimal capital structure evolves constantly, and successful corporate leaders must constantly consider six factors -- the company and its management, industry dynamics, the state of capital markets, the economy, government regulation and social trends. When these six factors indicate rising business risk, even a dollar of debt may be too much for some companies.

Over the past four decades, many companies have struggled with the wrong capital structures. During cycles of credit expansion, companies have often failed to build enough liquidity to survive the inevitable contractions. Especially vulnerable are enterprises with unpredictable revenue streams that end up with too much debt during business slowdowns. It happened 40 years ago, it happened 20 years ago, and it's happening again.

Overleveraging in many industries -- especially airlines, aerospace and technology -- started in the late 1960s. As the perceived risk of investing in such businesses grew in the 1970s, the price at which their debt securities traded fell sharply. But by using the capital markets to deleverage -- by paying off these securities at lower, discounted prices through tax-free exchanges of equity for debt, debt for debt, assets for debt and cash for debt -- most companies avoided default and saved jobs. (Congress later imposed a tax on the difference between the tax basis of the debt and the discounted price at which it was retired.)

Issuing new equity can of course depress a stock's value in two ways: It increases the supply, thus lowering the price; and it "signals" that management thinks the stock price is high relative to its true value.

Conversely, a company that repurchases some of its own stock signals an undervalued stock. Buying stock back, the theory goes, will reduce the supply and increase the price. Dozens of finance students have earned Ph.D.s by describing such signaling dynamics. But history has shown that both theories about lowering and raising stock prices are wrong with regard to deleveraging by companies that are seen as credit risks.

Two recent examples are Alcoa and Johnson Controls each of which saw its stock price increase sharply after a new equity issue last month. This has happened repeatedly over the past 40 years. When a company uses the proceeds from issuance of stock or an equity-linked security to deleverage by paying off debt, the perception of credit risk declines, and the stock price generally rises.

The decision to increase or decrease leverage depends on market conditions and investors' receptivity to debt. The period from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s generally favored debt financing. Then, in the late '80s, equity market values rose above the replacement costs of such balance-sheet assets as plants and equipment for the first time in 15 years. It was a signal to deleverage.

In this decade, many companies, financial institutions and governments again started to overleverage, a concern we noted in several Milken Institute forums. Along with others, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, we also pointed out that when companies reduce fixed obligations through asset exchanges, any tax on the discount ultimately costs jobs. Congress responded in the recent stimulus bill by deferring the tax for five years and spreading the liability over an additional five years. As a result, companies have already moved to repurchase or exchange more than $100 billion in debt to strengthen their balance sheets. That has helped save jobs.

The new law is also helpful for companies that made the mistake of buying back their stock with new debt or cash in the years before the market's recent fall. These purchases peaked at more than $700 billion in 2007 near the market top -- and in many cases, the value of the repurchased stock has dropped by more than half and has led to ratings downgrades. Particularly hard hit were some of the world's largest companies (i.e., General Electric, AIG, Merrill Lynch); financial institutions (Hartford Financial, Lincoln National, Washington Mutual); retailers (Macy's, Home Depot); media companies (CBS, Gannett); and industrial manufacturers (Eastman Kodak, Motorola, Xerox).

Without stock buybacks, many such companies would have little debt and would have greater flexibility during this period of increased credit constraints. In other words, their current financial problems are self-imposed. Instead of entering the recession with adequate liquidity and less debt with long maturities, they had the wrong capital structure for the time.

The current recession started in real estate, just as in 1974. Back then, many real-estate investment trusts lost as much as 90% of their value in less than a year because they were too highly leveraged and too dependent on commercial paper at a time when interest rates were doubling. This time around it was a combination of excessive leverage in real-estate-related financial instruments, a serious lowering of underwriting standards, and ratings that bore little relationship to reality. The experience of both periods highlights two fallacies that seem to recur in 20-year cycles: that any loan to real estate is a good loan, and that property values always rise. Fact: Over the past 120 years, home prices have declined about 40% of the time.

History isn't a sine wave of endlessly repeated patterns. It's more like a helix that brings similar events around in a different orbit. But what we see today does echo the 1970s, as companies use the capital markets to push out debt maturities and pay off loans. That gives them breathing room and provides hope that history will repeat itself in a strong economic recovery.
It doesn't matter whether a company is big or small. Capital structure matters. It always has and always will.
 

Imark

Forumer storico
La vicenda della cessione di Oriental Breweries da AB InBev a KKR ha generato considerazioni importanti sullo stato di salute del settore del private equity a pochi mesi dal default Lehman, trattandosi della seconda acquisizione significativa realizzata secondo il modello del LBO quest'anno.

Interessanti queste considerazioni formulate sul WSJ Online sulla disponibilità a prestare del sistema bancario al private equity, sul valore degli asset venduti in questa fase e sulla dimensione in termini di leverage delle operazioni di LBO rispetto al recente passato (e si sono viste operazioni anche più spinte del 7x-8x, specie nell'ultima tornata di LBO, quella che ha chiuso il precedente ciclo di liquidità abbondante nell'estate del 2007).

MAY 7, 2009, 6:53 A.M. ET

KKR and the Return, or Not, of Asian LBOs

By NISHA GOPALAN

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts $1.8 billion bid for South Korea's Oriental Brewery could be the exception that proves the rule.

KKR will borrow as much as $800 million of the purchase price from seven lenders, making the bid Asia's largest leveraged buyout in nearly a year, and the second biggest such deal this year globally, Dealogic says.
But this isn't the return of the LBO market in Asia. Instead it highlights just how much of a plum Oriental Brewery is, bankers say. South Korea's second largest brewer by market share, with its strong cash flows, has long been a coveted asset.

For most other deals, buyers will still find financing hard to come by. It means plenty of deals will just have to be paid for with good old-fashioned cash.

International banks continue to pull back on lending to the region as government entanglements and a need to keep funds closer to home hold them back. Loans to Asia fell at a record pace in the fourth-quarter, according to the Bank for International Settlements.

Indeed, KKR's lenders in this case make up the short list of international banks that remain free of government ownership and capital concerns: HSBC, Nomura, J.P. Morgan Chase and Standard Chartered, namely. KKR's strong relationship with the head offices of these firms helped.

As it is, leverage on the deal -- around four times Oriental Brewery's Ebitda -- is a far cry from the six or seven times funds often arranged before the credit crunch set in.

Were it not for Oriental Brewery's established, defensive business, even that might've been tough.

"Banks will only finance deals that are bulletproof credits," says Lindsay Chu, director at HSBCs financial sponsors group in Hong Kong.
Other than beermakers, food companies rank high on the list of possible targets.

Private equity firms certainly have plenty of their own firepower: they raised $48 billion for Asian investing last year, a record amount, according to the Centre for Asia Private Equity Research.

But at the end of the day, less leverage means lower returns
 
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Imark

Forumer storico
Altro passo in avanti del default rate su scala globale, anche se le scommesse del mercato restano quelle relative al raggiungimento del picco (tenendo conto che il miglior momento per acquistare sarebbe a sei mesi dal picco che segnerà l'inversione del ciclo della liquidità).

Nel mentre ad aprile siamo passati dal 7,4% di marzo all'8,3% su scala globale. Moody's conferma il picco in inverno, da realizzarsi a quota 14,8% a livello globale, per poi scendere al 10,4% ad un anno a partire da adesso.

Su base regionale, negli USA si è passati dall'8% al 9,2%, il picco è previsto al 14,5% entro fine 2009, in Europa il picco si farà nello stesso periodo, ma al 19,2%.

Il distress index (che misura il livello dei bond HY globali distressed) è passato dal 51,4% di marzo al 51,2% di aprile. Ai picchi post Lehman, si era arrivati (vado a memoria) ben sopra il 70%.

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Moody's: Global Spec-Grade Corporate Default Rate Increases to 8.3%[/FONT]
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[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]New York, May 07, 2009 -- The global speculative-grade corporate default rate continued its upward path in April, rising to 8.3% from a revised level of 7.4% in March, says Moody's Investors Service. A year ago, the global default rate stood at 1.7%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]The ratings agency's default rate forecasting model now predicts that the global default rate will rise to a peak level of 14.8% in the fourth quarter of 2009 before subsiding to 10.4% a year from today. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]"Although high yield bond spreads have declined significantly in the past couple of months, spreads still remain at near-record levels while corporate defaults have accelerated as access to capital for distressed companies remains very limited," said Moody's Director of Default Research Kenneth Emery. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]A total of 25 Moody's-rated corporate debt issuers defaulted in April, which sent the year-to-date default count to 112. In comparison, only 22 defaults were recorded in the first four months of 2008. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]The U.S. speculative-grade default rate increased to 9.2% in April from a revised level of 8.0% in March. At this time last year, the default rate stood at 2.0%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Measured on a dollar volume basis, the global speculative-grade bond default rate closed at 12.8% in April, up from a revised 10.5% level in March. Last year at this time, the global dollar-weighted default rate stood at 0.9%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Moody's default rate forecasting model now predicts that the U.S. speculative-grade default rate will peak at 14.5% in 2009, while the European speculative-grade default rate is expected to peak at 19.2%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Among U.S. speculative-grade issuers, the dollar-weighted bond default rate ended at 14.2% in April, up from March's revised level of 11.7%. The comparable rate was 1.1% a year ago. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Across industries over the coming year, Moody's default rate forecasting model indicates that Media companies, particularly those in the Advertising, Printing & Publishing sectors, will be the most troubled in the U.S. and the Durable Consumer Goods sector will have the highest default rate in Europe. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Moody's speculative-grade corporate distress index -- which measures the percentage of rated issuers that have debt trading at distressed levels -- closed at 51.2% at the end of April, down slightly from 51.4% in March. A year ago, the index was much lower at 19.8%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Overall, 89 of the 112 defaults year-to-date were by North American issuers, while European companies accounted for another 11 defaults. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]In the leveraged loan market, a total of 43 Moody's-rated loan defaulters were recorded in the first quarter, all by North American issuers. Last year, only 11 loan issuers defaulted in the comparable period. The trailing 12 month U.S. leveraged loan default rate rose from 5.0% in March to 6.4% in April. A year ago, the loan default rate stood at 1.5%. [/FONT]
 

Imark

Forumer storico
In Europa invece il default rate è rimasto stabile a quota 4,5% nel mese di aprile rispetto a marzo. A me il picco al 19% e passa di Moody's a fine 2009 mi sembra un po' difficile da raggiungere a quella scadenza (e già siamo in calo rispetto al 22% e passa pronosticato solo un paio di mesi fa o giù di lì.

Non perché creda che il picco si farà su quote più alte, ma essendo convinto che si farà più in avanti e che la discesa sarà più graduale ... ;)

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Moody's: Flat Growth for European Spec-Grade Defaults in April vs. March[/FONT]
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[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]New York, May 07, 2009 -- The European speculative-grade default rate was unchanged at 4.5% in April 2009 from March, says Moody's Investors Service in its monthly default report. On a year-on-year basis, the rate increased considerably, from 0.7% in April 2008.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]The annual increase was even more notable in the US, with the rate rising to 9.2% in April 2009 from 2.0% in April 2008 (and from a revised level of 8.0% in March 2009). The global rate also continued its upward path in April, rising to 8.3% from March's revised level of 7.4%. A year ago, the global default rate stood at only 1.7%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]A total of 25 Moody's-rated corporate debt issuers defaulted in April, which increases the year-to-date default count to 112. In comparison, only 22 defaults were recorded in the first four months last year. Across regions, 89 of the 112 defaults were by North American issuers while European companies accounted for another 11. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]"Although high yield bond spreads have declined significantly in the past couple of months, spreads still remain at near-record levels while corporate defaults have accelerated globally as access to capital for distressed companies remains very limited," said Moody's Director of Default Research Kenneth Emery.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Measured on a dollar volume basis, the European speculative-grade bond default rate closed at 4.2% in April, up from 3.8% (revised) in March. Last year, Moody's notes that the European dollar-weighted default rate was much lower, at only 0.2%. [/FONT]

[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]By comparison, in the US, the dollar-weighted speculative-grade bond default rate stood at 14.2% in April, up from March's revised level of 11.7%. The comparable rate was 1.1% in April 2008. Globally, the dollar-weighted speculative-grade bond default rate rose to 12.8% in April from 10.5% (revised) in March. A year ago, the global speculative-grade bond default rate was 0.9%.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Moody's speculative-grade corporate distress index -- which measures the percentage of rated issuers that have debt trading at distressed levels -- closed at 51.2% at the end of April, down slightly from 51.4% in March. A year ago, the index was much lower at 19.8%.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]In the leveraged loan market, a total of 43 Moody's-rated loan defaulters have thus far been recorded in 2009; all North American issuers. Last year, only 11 loan issuers defaulted in the comparable period. The trailing 12-month US leveraged loan default rate rose to 6.4% in April from 5.0% (revised) in March. A year ago, the loan default rate stood at 1.5%.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]"Going forward, Moody's default rate forecasting model now predicts that the European speculative-grade default rate will rise to 19.2% by the fourth quarter of 2009, while the US rate is set to peak at 14.5%" says Mr. Emery. Globally, the rating agency forecasts that the speculative-grade default rate will peak at 14.8% in the fourth quarter and then decline to 10.4% a year from now.[/FONT]


[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica]Across industries over the coming year, Moody's expects default rates to be highest in the Durable Consumer Goods sector in Europe and the Media sector in the US. [/FONT]
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Allora Asia, flight to quality è il movimento che porta i capitali investiti nell'obbligazionario a migrare da titoli più rischiosi (a rating speculativo, detti High Yield o HY in sigla) a titoli più sicuri, a rating da investimento o Investment Grade (IG in sigla).

In termini generici, il movimento da titoli a rating più basso che hanno maggiore rendimento verso titoli a rating più alto, a minore rendimento, viene chiamato anch'esso flight to quality.

Così, il movimento che porta il mercato a vendere un BTP decennale e a comprare un titolo di stato tedesco o francese di pari durata viene anch'esso qualificato come un movimento del tipo flight to quality.

Ci si accontenta di minori rendimenti per sentirsi più sicuri, questo è il flight to quality...
 
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Imark

Forumer storico
Ancora qui a prendere in esame una possibile conclusione del ciclo del flight to quality e una possibile ripresa della fase del ritorno alla liquidità disponibile.

Uno dei segnali precursori di tale inversione del ciclo della liquidità è costituito dalla ripresa delle emissioni HY.

E secondo Reuters sarebbero ben 6 gli emittenti europei HY che sembrano intenzionati a sfidare la sorte, dopo che solo Fresenius (che nell'HY è probabilmente l'emittente europea più solida in assoluto) aveva osato approcciare il mercato a gennaio 2009 con una nuova emissione che riapriva il mercato dell'HY europeo dopo oltre 1 anno e mezzo di assoluta chiusura.

La prima che ci riprova è nella fascia alta dell'HY: si tratta di Stora Enso, che ha riaperto una emissione, la 5,125% 2014, chiedendo altri 100 mln euro. Secondo Reuters, il nuovo prezzo offerto potrebbe essere attorno a 75, ma il bond ha chiuso gli scambi ieri sera all'ICMA, dopo l'annuncio, a 78,50 e dunque può ben darsi che Stora abbia da offrire un rendimento più basso del previsto.

Peraltro, se l'emissione andasse a buon fine, Stora avrebbe ultimato la copertura delle esigenze di copertura del debito del biennio 2009-2010 con un attingimento minimo o nullo alla linea di credito inutilizzata (ed incondizionata) in scadenza nel 2012, e per la società sarebbe un bel segnale.

Faccio disclosure: posseggo questo bond...

UPDATE 1-Stora Enso plans rare high yield bond tap - IFR

Thu May 14, 2009 11:11am EDT

* Stora Enso to reopen European high-yield market
* New bond to yield 12-12.5 percent - guidance talk

(adds guidance talk, S&P downgrade)

LONDON, May 14 (Reuters) - Stora Enso (STERV.HE) is testing investor risk appetite with plans to increase an existing bond by 100 million euros (136 million), reopening the moribund European high-yield bond market.
The Nordic papermaker plans to increase the size of a June 2014 bond, IFR reported on Thursday. It would only be the second issue in the junk bond market since the financial crisis hit credit markets in June 2007.

The bond is expected to yield between 12 to 12.5 percent, according to one source familiar with the situation, citing guidance talk in the market.
HSBC, the sole lead manager of the deal, declined to comment on the pricing.

The deal emerged amid growing expectations for a spat of high yield deals before the summer shutdown.

Up to six European heavily indebted companies are lining up to issue high-yield bonds in the next two to four weeks, bankers said [ID:nLD856786].
German healthcare group Fresenius (FREG_p.DE) saw strong demand for a 275 million euro bond, maturing in 2015, which was issued in January this year.

High-yield borrower Nexans (NEXS.PA), the world's biggest cable maker, is also meeting bond investors this week to discuss its finances in a roadshow.

5-10 PCT DISCOUNT

The 2014 bonds, which were issued in June 2004, are trading at around 81 percent of face value, according to Reuters data.

A yield of 12 percent on the new bonds would indicate a price of around 75 cents, offering a 5 to 10 percent discount to the current 2014 bonds, the source said.

"We won't be taking them up on this," the source added.

Five-year credit default swaps on Stora Enso, a member of the mostly junk-rated Crossover index, were about 6 basis points wider at 479 basis points, according to Markit data.

Separately, Standard & Poor's cut Stora's credit rating by one notch to BB just after the mandate was announced and removed the rating from credit watch negative.

The rating agency said the company's business and financial risk has increased due to challenging market conditions.

Fitch Ratings has a BB+ rating on Stora Enso, while Moody's Investors Service rates the company at Ba2.

($1=.7377 Euro)
(Reporting by Natalie Harrison and Jane Baird; editing by Elaine Hardcastle
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Devo rettificare l'indicazione precedente, in quanto in realtà - diversamente da quanto affermato da Reuters - già ieri sera Stora Enso ha confermato di aver chiuso l'operazione con successo, collocando nuovi 230 mln del bond, per cui i prezzi esprimono il valore di un'operazione già conclusa.

E' dunque la seconda operazione di collocamento di bond HY andata in porto dopo l'estate 2007, quando la crisi provocò la chiusura di fatto di questo mercato per la raccolta di capitali.

Stora Enso Successfully Completes Eurobond Tap

Thu. May 14, 2009; Posted: 12:45 PM

HELSINKI, Finland, May 14, 2009 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) -- SEOAY | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating -- Stora Enso has today announced that the company has successfully tapped its EUR 517 555 000 5.125% June 2014 notes by EUR 232 445 000 which will bring the total transaction size to EUR 750 000 000.

The new notes were issued with a 12.25% yield and were priced at 74.099. The newly issued bearer notes will become fungible with the original notes after 40 days. As per the original issue, the new notes will be listed on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange . Settlement date of the transaction is set at 20 May 2009. Denominations are EUR 1 000, EUR 10 000, EUR 100 000 and EUR 1 000 000

Stora Enso is rated Ba2 (neg) by Moody's and BB (neg) by Standard & Poor's .

The bond was issued to extend Company's debt structure and take advantage of improved credit market conditions. The funds will be used to reduce short-term debt maturities.

Bookrunner for this transaction was HSBC Bank Plc.

Stora Enso is the world leader in forest industry sustainability. We offer our customers solutions based on renewable raw materials. Our products provide a climate-friendly alternative to many non-renewable materials, and have a smaller carbon footprint. Stora Enso is included in the Global 100 list of the world's most sustainable companies. Stora Enso is also listed in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index, the FTSE4Good Index, and the Climate Disclosure Leadership Index. Stora Enso employs 29 000 people worldwide, and our sales in 2008 amounted to EUR 11.0 billion.
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Intanto il WSJ comincia a fare i conti delle emissioni HY e constata come i bond Hy emessi negli USA ad oggi nel 2009 eccedano già il totale di quelli emessi nel 2008: 33 mld $ contro 27 mld.

Sebbene le nuove emissioni provengano soprattutto da soggetti nella fascia alta dell'HY, i gain più forti sono stati registrati dai prezzi dalle emissioni di titoli più rischiosi sul mercato secondario, quelli a rating CCC (e che ancora dovranno vedere una notevole crescita dei livelli di default, secondo le stesse agenzie).

Il fatto é che nell'ultimo mese sono stati allocati in fondi HY USA ben 1,17 mld $ alla settimana, e questo è il livello più elevato dal 2003, ossia dalla fase che fece seguito alla fine del precedente "flight to quality" obbligazionario, quello del biennio 2001-2002.

Continuano le richieste di opinioni agli osservatori circa il fatto che un tale movimento sia destinato a durare oppure no... anche chi avesse un'idea chiara, di certo non la va a raccontare al WSJ... :D

MAY 19, 2009, 4:21 P.M. ET

Junk-Bond Issuance Jumps

By ANDREW EDWARDS

NEW YORK -- New issuance continued to pile into the junk-bond market Tuesday as companies jumped to get deals in before the Memorial Day holiday.

Ashland Inc. came to the market with a $600 million deal, followed by a more-than $400 million deal from Corrections Corp., making for a more than $1 billion day. The Corrections Corp. deal was upsized from its initial $300 million level.

New issuance has been strong since the beginning of the month, matching what continues to be strong inflows in the high-yield space. While most of the deals are still coming in from highly regarded names, the strongest names in the secondary market have been the extra-risky CCC category, implying investors are willing to sink cash into the bottom of the barrel in search of yield.

After much initial skepticism, some investors are starting to think this rally has legs. In that case, the continued issuance is a good sign.

"I think that high yield is still a good buying opportunity; we've had a lot of yield spread narrowing and we've got a lot more to come," said Margie Patel of Evergreen Investment Advisors. "You can judge the health of the market that we've had a pretty good [issuance] calendar so far this year."

According to Ms. Patel, there has been about $33 billion in new high-yield issuance this year, compared with about $27 billion at this time last year.

However, Ms. Patel and other investors are quick to admit that much of the gains, and the strong calendar itself are technically, rather than fundamentally, driven. Over the last month, an average of $1.17 billion a week has poured in the high-yield space, according to AMG Data Services in Arcata, Calif. That's the fastest pace in six years, according to AMG President Robert Adler.

The technicals have been driven by investors coming into high yield from equities, said Scott Grzankowski of KDP Advisors. He said the hunger, particularly on the low end, implies that there is even more appetite for paper.

"There's still money out there looking for yield," Mr. Grzankowski said.

"That would lead me to believe that this rally will hold a little while longer. It's still not too late to sell in May and go away, but, at the same time, we're running out of days."
 
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